“I ask on their
behalf; I do not ask on behalf of the world, but of those whom You have given
Me; for they are Yours; and all things that are Mine are Yours, and Yours are
Mine; and I have been glorified in them” (John 17:9 – 10).
“All things that
the Father has are Mine” (16:15).
As we saw when
contemplating John 16:12 – 15, all that the Father has, Jesus has, and all that
Jesus has, we have. There is a unity of possession in the Trinity, a unity
of Nature, a unity of Person. God is indivisible. This, of
course, is a mystery. In the Incarnation, we see a unity of God and Man
in the Person of Jesus Christ, yet another Divine mystery. In the Body of
Christ there is a further unity, it is the unity of the Head and the Body,
of the Bridegroom and His Bride, once again, a mystery into which we can
only see so far; we can experience more than we can see and understand,
but this is nearly always the case (if not always) in our life in Christ and
with one another in Him.
There is a sense
in which, while the Father gave us to Jesus, that we already belonged to Jesus,
because all that the Father has, Jesus has; and all that Jesus has, the Father
has. Perhaps this is akin to a husband and wife who have a beautiful flower
garden. The flowers belong to both wife and husband; they both have full
possession of the land and the flowers. Can you see the husband in the flower
garden, carefully choosing and picking flowers for his wife? Can you then see
the husband giving the bouquet of carefully picked and arranged flowers to his
beloved? Can we hear the wife say, “Thank you dear husband for giving me these beautiful
flowers. Thank you for your love and thoughtfulness”?
The flowers
always belonged to both husband and wife. Yet, in a true sense the husband also
gave the flowers to his beloved spouse and she accepted them.
When we
acknowledge that all that the Father has, the Son also has; and that all that
the Son has, the Father also has (and that this unity is also true of the Holy
Spirit), it can strengthen our vision of the Holy One and enable us to more
clearly “see” the invisible, having deepening faith in Him. It
will also hopefully give us an assurance of our salvation in our Rock, Jesus
Christ. After all, if we have belonged to the Father, and if the Father has
given us to the Son, there is nothing, there is no one, there is no thing, that
can separate us from the love of God in Jesus Christ our Lord (Romans 8:31 –
39).
Yesterday in
Paris, thieves broke into the Louvre in the daytime and stole some of France’s precious
crown jewels. The theft took about four minutes. Do we really suppose that the
Father would allow an enemy to steal His treasures? To break into His heavenly
domain, His Temple, into His Family Home, and steal those who are precious to
Him, those who have been purchased by the life blood of His Son?
Do we think that
the Son does not protect those whom the Father has given to Him in holy trust (John
17:11 – 12)? Do we dare to think that the Bridegroom allows His Bride to be
violated? O dear friends, while we may not understand all that goes on around
us, while we may not have much understanding and vision amid the present chaos,
let us never doubt our God, let us never cease to behold and receive His love
for us in Christ, let us never give place to the enemy for a moment – for frankly
all of life, all of our lives, comes down to this – the Nature and Character
of God. Can we, do we, trust Him?
When Jesus says,
“I have been glorified in them,” we are taken back to a previous meditation in which
we asked, “How can this be?” This can be because we belong to God. This can be because
of the love and work of Jesus Christ. This can be because what Jesus begins His
completes. This can be because we belong to Jesus Christ, we are no longer our
own, we have been bought with a price.
O the blessed
assurance to know that the Father has given us to Jesus, to know that we
belong to Jesus and that we are no longer our own – we have been bought by the
blood of the Lamb and sealed by the Holy Spirit of Promise.